By Will Whitby
Jul 25, 2016 15:00
When 'Bleed American' was released I was only 6 years old. I liked Wacky Races, whizzing round until I fell over and Westlife - I never truly discovered Jimmy Eat World until my teenage years.
It’s 2001. Blink 182 are running round the streets naked and moaning about being 23, the millennium has brought a new wave of youth exuberance, it is the golden age of nu-metal and skater kids are shredding the gnar on Tony Hawk Pro Skater 3 whilst drinking Sunny Delight until their skin turns yellow.
The turn of the millennium is a time that defined pop punk and emo. Grunge has returned to the underground, the boyband boom is slowly dying off and the world is living in a happy-go-lucky pre-9/11 world. Classic after classic is being churned out by US pop punk hit-makers with Alien Ant Farm, The Offspring, Weezer, American Football and pop punk behemoths, Blink 182, all hitting it big.
Today the internet enjoys looking back at this time as a novelty, with quizzes determining which band you are depending on your favourite pizza, complete with the guy from Smash Mouth in the sidebar. But amongst the spiky hair and flame shirts there were some genuine genre and generation defining classics. ‘Bleed American’ by Jimmy Eat World was one of them.
The Arizona band were dropped by Capitol after moderate success with their debut and second albums. ‘Bleed American’ itself nearly never happened, with the band self-funding the entire recording and promotion process. The band had to put the music on the backseat and get “real jobs” working in construction, driving customers around an auto parts dealership, and selling art supplies.
In a 2001 interview shortly before 9/11, they seemed only dimly aware of the success that was about to come their way. “We had no idea what was going to happen, but there were signs of things to be encouraged by. When we went on tour, it just seemed to be getting better and better.”